Huntington Police to Recruit More Officers

The Huntington Police Department will step up its recruiting efforts as the application deadline approaches

The Herald-Dispatch reports the department will start using billboards, posters, flyers, brochures, social media and recruiting videos to let people know they are hiring more officers.

The city of Huntington has allocated $600,000 to the department for equipment upgrades and hiring efforts. The money comes from the projected $2.2 million in revenue generated from a $2 increase in the city’s user fee.

Huntington police chief Joe Ciccarelli says the department will also try to expand efforts to recruit minorities and create a more diverse department. The department currently has 104 officers, six of whom are female and three of whom are black.

All applications must be submitted by Jan. 22, 2016.

Marshall Hosts Panel on Prostitution Issues

Marshall University hosted a panel to brainstorm ideas for battling prostitution in the Huntington community.

News outlets report that about 200 students and residents attended the event in the Memorial Student Center Wednesday night.

Marshall University professor Maggie Stone revealed there are 1 million to 2 million active prostitutes in the country. She presented alternatives to jailing prostitutes including legalization and decriminalization.

Drug court judge Patricia Keller focused on current programs like the WEAR program, which works to cater to prostitutes’ needs with counseling. Keller says since the drug court’s inception, 100 people have graduated and 85 percent are never seen in the court system again.

The panel was part of an overall theme of events done by Women’s Connect, a partnership of the Women’s Center and Women’s Studies program.

Armed Man Arrested After Marshall Campus Chase

  A man has been arrested after police say he led authorities on a chase through the Marshall University campus while he carried a gun.

Huntington Police Chief Joe Ciccarelli said that police received a call Monday afternoon reporting a suspicious person with a gun walking toward the college campus. Both Marshall Police officers and Huntington Police officers responded. When the suspect saw the first responding officer, he fled on foot.

As police chased the suspect, authorities say he threw his 9 mm pistol onto the roof of the college’s Communications Building.

Police arrested the man minutes later and identified him as 19-year-old Brian Nelms-Jolly. He is charged with possession of a concealed and deadly weapon and fleeing on foot.

It is unclear whether Nelms-Jolly has an attorney.

Police Throughout the State Embracing New Technology

The next time you get pulled over for a driving too fast the police officer might have a camera pointed directly at you. The next wave of technology for officers around the country is body cameras.

There are different types of boy cameras.  From ones that are built into glasses, ones clipped on the collar or chest pocket and sometimes on the gun belt. The Winfield Police Department purchased them last year and was one of the first in the state to start using them.

“The highlights here are safety and accountability, investigative tool and for training purposes and when you look at that, the community is always looking at the integrity and professionalism of the police department is based on those factors,” Winfield Police Chief John Perrine said.

That’s Winfield Police Chief John Perrine. His unit uses cameras the size of a thumb drive that they clip to the left pocket on the front of their police uniform.

Other municipalities are looking into the idea as well. Kenova Police Chief Ray Mossman is looking into it. With a small staff of policeman in the small community of Kenova he said he has the ability to do unique things. Mossman says there are different factors that he has to consider before deciding which camera system to use.

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“My background is evidence and crime scene investigation and to me it’s me being able to get evidence upon you as the suspect and so I think it’s a good tool for that, because we go into court and raise our right hand and swear and you have us at our word, but this takes that and there is no question what happened, happened,” Mossman said.

The costs range from $100 per camera to as much as $3,000, about the same price as the dash cams currently used in police cars throughout the region.

Morgantown Police Chief Ed Preston said the cameras accomplish a few different things.

We’re not doing anything different than we have been through the courts and through policy and procedure, the only thing we’ve done is essentially you take the in car camera and you take it off the dashboard and you walk up to the car with it or you walk up to the call with it, that’s the only difference,” Preston said.

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Other cities like Huntington, Charleston and Fayette County are also in the planning stages of implementing body cameras as well

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